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Comment Re:Understanding rules looser than style guide rul (Score 2) 667

The rules sufficient for successful understanding are looser than the rules prescribed by style guides.

This is particularly true for spoken English vs written English. In spoken English, intonation and body language contribute to communication, eg bad vs bad. You're expected to fill in missing/garbled words from context. Written English is an attempt to encode all of that information.

So, sure, sloppy spelling, poor grammar, and homophone substitution may be understandable to your close friends. That makes it more of a code language or private language, and there's plenty of times where we like to share private, insider conversations. If you actually want to communicate with everyone, you have to use the parent language - step back from the Southern drawl or the Scots brogue and speak Common.

Comment Re:This ex-Swatch guy doesn't have a clue (Score 1) 389

Sadly, the swatch-brand cheap watches were shit back then. A timex or a cheap casio digital would have been better. The cheap swatch couldn't actually take any abuse.

But a basic black, $10 timex was boring. Swatch made cheap ($20), crap watches that came in different colors. With 'funky' designs. People paid for swatches twice what they were worth because they had an off-center stripe on the face. And then someone realized that you could wear two, three, or even four swatches on one arm!

When the swatch guy gets up and tells you that iWatch has the potential to crush swiss watchmaking, he's talking about fashion, not function.

Comment Re:Here's one (Score 1) 348

maybe I'm daft, but that is actually a reasonable job offer there. They would like someone to load some data into a hadoop cluster. Might take 6 months.

Agreed. I think a lot of the sour-grapes group look at "Excellent understating of HADOOP ecosystem" and read "founding developer of HADOOP," or interpret "Excellent Knowledge of Linux" as "Kernel developer." They're looking for a "big data" person and saying they're a Java shop with HADOOP/NoSQL infrastructure. Those people are out there. If you're not one of them, then this job may not be for you. 4 years experience means they're targeting people probably 25-30 years old. If you have vastly more experience than that, then this job may not be for you.

For pay rate, $30/hr is, to most of the country, a pretty good wage, especially early in the career. Other "good paying" jobs: construction, $15-25; Auto plant, starting at $16; teacher, start $18, median $35.

Comment Re:SOME of that is clueless HR. SOME is to get H1B (Score 2) 348

But some of it is part of the "hire a cheap H1B" game. By making the requirements impossible (or rejecting all but a handfull of people who already receive astronomical fees on the consulting market), they can claim that "There are no available US citizens quaified for the post." Then they hire an H1B.

At most 85,000 H1b visas are issued each year. 7000 per month, nation-wide, compared with 2.8 million people employed in "Information Technology." I think you overestimate the impact of H1b on your personal employability.

Comment Re:RTFA (Score 1) 282

It doesn't matter how easily you can walk there and disable the camera, if you are caught on camera first. That's who most camera placements that can be "snuck up on" have a camera pointed at that camera. Nobody can take out all the cameras without getting caught on camera.

The point of TFA is that people have dumb camera placement. They take the one camera they get free with the security system and put it in the bedroom, or otherwise inside. They mount the camera on the roof, pointed down at the front door, offering a nice view of an intruder's baseball cap. And honestly, the electric meter on most of the homes I've seen is mounted discretely behind the shrubbery, so it doesn't spoil the view of the house, and reasonably accessible to human meter-readers (they only stopped being a thing a decade or two ago in most areas). Then again, few of the homes I've seen have multiple ring-walls that seem to be common in AK.

Comment Re:Hilarious (Score 1) 366

Genetics? more like skin color or language or location or a combination of all three, how many white races are there?

Considering that, for a long time, the boundaries established by language and location prevented human interbreeding, those seem like pretty reasonable indicators of genetic drift. That is, the same population trends that allow languages to drift also allow genetic drift. Maybe we'll see that disappear, now that it's so easy to travel, but it's really only been 30 years or so. Skin tone, hair color, and facial structure are just the most obvious external indicators of genetic variation.

Comment Re:Lift the gag order first... (Score 1) 550

tiering should still work, the thing being blocked is certain companies/products have a bit of a faster lane to get through the network. Paid priority will no longer exist

The one legitimately valuable business arrangement that I can see being blocked by net neutrality is where I buy the lowest possible tier of service from my ISP, because email doesn't require much bandwidth, but then buy premium delivery from Netflix, where Netflix pays my ISP to deliver data faster than my service tier.

Comment Re:Taste of their own medicine (Score 1) 550

Already been done. The conservatives had a shitfit when their ads were blocked.

What beautiful irony. The proponents of small government and deregulation, running to a government agency complaining that a private company won't run ads calling for government regulators to block a business transaction.

Comment Re:Lift the gag order first... (Score 5, Insightful) 550

I hate the big ISPs too. Everyone does. But the solution to them is competition. Not government regulation. Just remove the stupid laws that make it illegal for rival companies to lay cable in their territory.

Those laws don't exist in general. The primary thing preventing Time Warner from running cable to my house is the fact that Comcast already has a wire there. Comcast has already spent the millions of dollars required to wire my neighborhood, and the tens of millions required to wire my town. Whatever price Time Warner can offer, Comcast can beat, because they've already sunk costs. Time Warner can, optimistically, hope to get 50% of cable subscribers, meaning at most half the revenue that Comcast projected to pay off their capital. There is no way for a new cable company to compete effectively with one that's already laid out the major capital expenses. The only reason DSL is competitive is it doesn't require laying new copper to every home.

Likewise, there's no way multiple electric or gas companies could compete with an incumbent who had already wired/plumbed a neighborhood. When cities deregulate gas/electric service, they do so by transferring the wires to one company, and forcing that company to sell transit to all comers at regulated rates. If you want to see competition among ISPs, nationalize the coax, copper and fiber, and let the ISPs rent bandwidth to subscribers' homes and manage their access.

Comment Re:Lots of weird crap coming out of Congress latel (Score 1) 517

I am prepared to engage with you on this issue rationally. But you should be warned now... I am extremely rational. Doubletalk, sophistry, and other fallacious nonsense will simply get vivisected and pinned to an examination table while I take it apart bit by bit putting each little piece in its own little formaldehyde jar with its own little label.

That's fine. You're exactly the audience this piece of legislation targets. I mean, really, who would make a rational argument against using good, reproducible, published science to support their policy.

This legislation is social engineering that depends on the distinction between theory and practice. In theory, it's great to use data to support your policies, to have good science backing your regulations, and to know the exact effects you're trying to block or induce. In practice, those data do not exist. There's 150+ chemicals at my job site, and the MSDSs for half of them report "Data not available." This legislation is intended to delay for as long as possible any regulatory action.

Example, pentachlorophenol, one of the most common preservatives for telephone poles and RR ties over the past 30 years, still lacks any human carcinogenicty studies. It looks like penta is metabolized in vivo to a much more carcinogenic compound, and I imagine that another 10 years or so will produce pretty convincing data. Meanwhile, the EPA has been allowed to regulate penta as a probable carcinogen since the early 80s. This includes banning the sale to private individuals (it used to be a popular fungicide for people to spray around their basements). Penta is one of the better studied molecules because of its popularity and explicitly toxic function, and after 60 years, one can still argue that there is no reproducible scientific data demonstrating its role in cancer.

Comment Re:Lots of weird crap coming out of Congress latel (Score 5, Informative) 517

You mean the compounds so secret that there's a wikipedia page listing them all?

First, there is no reason to believe that list is exhaustive. According to the page itself, it is "a partial list of the chemical constituents in additives that are used or have been used in fracturing operations." It was only released in 2011 in response to a congressional investigation, having been held secret for 60 years. Nor does it help you know whether fracking fluid is mostly toluene or mostly liquid nitrogen (personally, my guess is that there is very little, if any, liquid nitrogen in fracking fluids, but it's on the list)

Second, from a random sampling of MSDS:

  • 2,2-Dibromomalonamide: No human toxicity studies have been carried out with this product. Not evaluated by IARC.
  • Poly(diallyldimethylammonium chloride): Not evaluated by IARC. No carcinogenicity information is available
  • Carboxymethyl hydroxypropyl guar: Carcinogenic effects: Not available; Mutagenic effects: Not available; Developmental toxicity: Not available

So, under the proposed legislation, even if you know what the chemicals are, you have to wait for someone to get interested enough in them to perform ecological, carcinogenic, and mutagenic studies with those specific chemicals and publishes the results. Until someone proves that a compound is carcinogenic, it would be regulated like it is not carcinogenic.

Perhaps you are willing to have your dinner grown next to a factory that can hold its chemical waste secret for 60 years, and then be unable to regulate that waste for another few years or decades, waiting for someone to bother to measure their health effects. Maybe you believe that no company would knowingly or accidentally release chemicals without clear confidence in their non-toxicity (even if they can't release that data to the public). Maybe you trust those companies, more than the politicized EPA, to balance their profits against potential harm to humans and environment.

Comment Re:NOT TO BE TRUSTED (Score 1) 130

1 Companies that sell software... better have all code open sourced (not same as free) or should be labelled "NOT TO BE TRUSTED".

No way to tell whether the provided source code matches the provided firmware

Code (including scripts and updates) is then compiled locally and before first execution hash checked automatically against non-centralized database (p2p technology similar to bitcoin block chain)

1) binary code will vary depending on the specific architecture, optimizations, and libraries during compilation. 2) a hash can be falsified as easily as a binary.

3. All hardware sold with precise technical diagrams... or should be labelled "NOT TO BE TRUSTED"

At least an order of magnitude less effective than open source, and we've seen that even "important" OSS like openssl can go decades without independent code review.

4. All encryption always on client side.

Quite sensible, although I suspect that people will rapidly become frustrated when they forget their pass phrase, or lose their private key, and 5 years of family snapshots disappear. Or when grandma dies, taking access to her archive of family history with her.

5. Get rid of centralized authorities for security (looking at you SSL) Centralized servers have big fat sign that say "NOT TO BE TRUSTED". P2P.

Because you'd rather trust 1000 amateurs to secure all of their systems than one professional to secure his server?

7. Shaming lists on NGOs (applause to EFF). Any politician that votes for mass surveillance or doesn't adhere to above principles. put on NGO lists as "HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATORS"

Yeah, ranks right up there with executing journalists and kidnapping babies. Among the most certain ways to get people to ignore you is to blow your cause completely out of proportion. If you use the same words to describe digital surveillance as other people use to describe the Khmer Rouge or Stalin, then people are going to think you're a nutcase.

Comment Re:Jail time (Score 1) 538

Well, if anybody else in government did this, they'd get fired, lose their pension, and possibly face criminal charges.

Still waiting on charges against Sarah Palin, for the same offense. I'm guessing it will be a cold day in hell before either sees any consequences beyond partisan propaganda. In fact, I'm pretty sure this is one of those rules, like declaring any gifts over $50, that gets employees a firm warning not to do it again.

Comment Re:Good grief... (Score 1) 681

"Computer Systems Engineering" covers it pretty well -- it's a mix of EE and CS so you end up with a ground-up understanding from transistor to circuit to chipset to architecture to OS to software.

But it's often not "Computer systems engineering" anymore, it's CS: computer science. Dropping the E allows you to skimp on or abstract the transistor/circuit, and focus on architecture and software. CSE these days seems to mean "Computational science and engineering," which is a completely other thing, having more to do with the simulation of experiments than the design of computer/software (although you may need to write some software to simulate your expeirments).

Comment Re:Good grief... (Score 1) 681

Oh, because dave420 is soooo much more identifiable, right Einstein? Pot, Kettle...

AC posts a joke. Sardaukar86 disses AC for not 'hav[ing] the guts' to put his name to it. dave420 points out the hypocrisy in pseudonymously railing against anonymity.

dave420 may or may not agree with sardaukar86's point (that one should have the courage to post insults under his own name), though likely not. dave420 is making a completely different point, that distinguishing between anonymous and pseudonymous is silly. Your 'pot, kettle' reference is appropriately applied to Sardaukar86, not to dave420.

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